Still At Arms Length
The Provenance
- Style
- Melodic Death Metal
- Label
- Scarlet Records 0
- Reviewed by
- Jack
/ 100
Killing songs: <i>Climbing Ideals, Tearfull Bitter Broken, At Random Choose</i>
The Provenance means place or source of origin. So the provenance
of this band is Gotenburg, Sweden. This city is Scandinavia's largest port with
an architectural blend of well-preserved old districts and exciting new areas,
such as the redeveloped shipyards. Gotenburg is in the center of Scandinavia,
equidistant from Stockholm, Oslo and Copenhagen. The city is known for its friendly
atmosphere with plenty of cafés, restaurants which serve local seafood,
and pubs which are interspersed with wide avenues and beautiful parks and gardens.
But this city is also well known for its local metal scene since numbers of Swedish
death metal bands helped creating the “Gotenburg sound”.
Imagine now a young band thinking of blending Swedish symphonic rock and English
doom, along with keyboards and flute and female vocals. with the Gotenburg
sound. What you’ve got then in 2001 is an interesting first album called
25th Hour; Bleeding where the band’s will to experiment created
a majestic blend of sophisticated harmonies and pure head-banging sequences
on this heavy, passionate, introspective, technical and original piece of work.
They managed to accentuate all five members in ways seldom heard and this is
an album showing the provenance of something great. Now, less than a couple
of years later comes their second full length, Still At Arms Length on
Scarlet Records again. The band has gained a lot in maturity and they have managed
to develop their sound and their musical orientation a little further. The band’s
influences are very obvious as on their first album. Touches from Anathema and My Dying Bride
as for English doom and some early The Gathering (era
Anneke of course) and soft Opeth influences along with some
light In Flames or even Dark Tranquility as
for the Gotenburg sound. But the band
went a little further with the experimentation and tends to become very atmospheric
and progressive at times, especially due to the fragile haunting and desperate
female voice of Emma Hellström and her soft flute and piano and keyboard
parts. Tobias Martinsson’s male vocals are getting sometimes clearer than on
their previous effort and complements Emma’s voice better, but he also
remains deathish when he has to. The band also added some more nice folk influences
into their music which helps develop their music into new territories more progressive
than on their first album.
All in all this is a second album that is far more interesting than their previous
one. As we did not review their first album, there will be no comparison of
quotation, but I urge all those who bought their first effort and liked it to
go get this one. I would really love to see this guys (and girl) on stage as
their music is really interesting.